Stephen Fry
Stephen John Fry (born 24 August, 1957) is a well known British comedian, author, actor and director. Son of Alan and Marianne Fry.
He was educated at Stout's Hill, Uppingham and Queens' College, Cambridge, England. He lives in Norfolk, London, and New York City. He is an erstwhile collaborator of Hugh Laurie's.
Career highlights
Highlights of Fry's career include:
- While still at boarding school, Fry absconded with a stolen credit card and, when apprehended, spent three months in prison for fraud.
- He made an early television appearance on University Challenge while an undergraduate at Cambridge.
- In 1984, he rewrote the script of the stage musical, Me and My Girl, which subsequently became a huge West End hit.
- Due to make his debut on the West End stage in Simon Gray's play, Cell Mates, Fry suffered an attack of stage fright so serious that he ran away, leaving only an apology, and turning up some days later in Belgium.
- He famously declared that he practised a celibate lifestyle (which he has since abandoned for a life of lechery).
- He made his debut as a film director with Bright Young Things, an adaptation of the novel Vile Bodies by Evelyn Waugh, in 2003.
List of Works
- Films (As Director)
- Novels
- Other books
- TV scripts
- A Bit of Fry and Laurie (1990)
- A Bit More Fry and Laurie
- Fry & Laurie #3
- Three Bits of Fry and Laurie
- Fry & Laurie Bit No. 4
- Plays
- Screenplays
- Musicals
Performances
- TV programmes
- Films
- Plays
- Radio shows
Stephen Fry also narrates the audio versions of the Harry Potter books
Trivia
The Stars' Tennis Balls contains several major characters whose names are anagrams or other simple mutations of their counterparts in The Count of Monte Cristo. For example:
Mercedes
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Portia
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pun
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de Villefort
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Oliver Delft
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anagram
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the Abbe (Faria)
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the Babe (Fraser)
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anagram (partial)
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Fernand Mondego
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Gordon Fendeman
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anagram
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Noirtier
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Blackrow
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translated literally
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Capt. Leclere
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Paddy Leclare
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homonym
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Caderousse
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Cade, Rufus |
similar sound
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Danglars
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Garland
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anagram (mostly)
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Links
Referenced By
1957 | 1957 in film | 1957 incumbents | 24 August | 24th August | Alan Davies | Alternate History | Alternative comedy | August 24 | August 24th | Ben Elton | Black Adder | Blackadder | Blackadder's Christmas Carol | Blackadder: Back & Forth | Blackadder: the Cavalier Years | Blackadder Goes Forth | Blackadder II | Blackadder the Third | British Comedians | British comedian | Cambridge Footlights | Douglas Adams | Douglas Adams Biography | Douglas Noël Adams | Famous Smokers | Famous gay lesbian and bisexual people | Famous gay lesbian or bisexual people | Footlights | Footlights Club | Gosford Park | Have I Got News For You episodes list | Hugh Laurie | I'm Sorry, I Haven't a Clue | I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue | Jeeves | Jeeves and Wooster | List of British comedians | List of Comedians | List of English novelists | List of famous gay, lesbian, and bisexual people | List of famous gay, lesbian, or bisexual people | List of famous gay, lesbian or bisexual people | List of famous gay lesbian and bisexual people | List of funny gay, lesbian or bisexual people | List of game show hosts | List of novelists by country: England | List of people by name: Fr | Melchett | Orlando Bloom | Oscar Wilde | P.G. Wodehouse | P. G. Wodehouse | Palindrome | Palindromes | Perrier Award | Perrier Comedy Award | Peter's Friends | Queen's College, Cambridge | Queens' College, Cambridge | Queens' College, University of Cambridge | Queens College, Cambridge | Queens College, Cambridge | Reginald Jeeves | School and university in literature | Sidewise Award for Alternate History | The Black Adder | The Boys from Brazil | The Discovery of Heaven | Whose Line Is It, Anyway? | Whose Line Is It Anyway? | Wilde | Wodehouse
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